reliable digital control at scale

The digital transition of industrial automation is beyond the point of no return, yet the way most corporations approach it is fundamentally broken. As a result, reliability, maintainability, and cyber security degrade.

Tools

Services

You are the expert, we provide the tools

Building and maintaining the digital backbone of industrial production requires a new set of tools that allow engineers to plan, specify, monitor, optimize, and verify hyper-complex systems of systems as if they had never done anything else. No matter where they are, or what time it is. Without having to physically be at a particular control system cabinet, or having access to a system expert who just might be on vacation.

This is what we do:

Providing a disruptive way of looking at digital OT infrastructures where everything is connected with everything. Today, risk is not hiding in isolated components, but in complex hidden dependencies.We let engineers identify and navigate such dependencies — not just for an isolated system, but for a corporation’s global fleet.

Dad’s Software Tools won’t build the Industrial Internet

If all you have is a couple of spreadsheets and wiring diagrams that are stored in a shared folder, going for the hyper-connected Industrial Internet of Things (IIoT) might not end well. The hybrid, multi-dimensional characteristics of IIoT software configurations and network architectures can’t be captured in office applications such as Excel and Visio. And neither tool was designed to support change management workflows, audit trails, and cyber security incident management.

Large-scale OT systems with multi-dimensional relationships require purpose-built tools that make navigating and analyzing the complex reality straightforward and efficient. Learn in these videos how state-of-the-art tools enable you to cope with digital complexity on the plant floor.

“The idea that it would be impossible or even particularly difficult to tightly control complex digital industrial infrastructure is patently absurd. The digital transition doesn’t only present us with new challenges. It also provides us means to deal with these challenges. The reality is: New tools allow engineers to manage digital industrial automation systems better than ever before.”